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Difference between revisions of "LOOP/ENDLOOP"

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(Useless example)
(Useless example)
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==Useless example==
 
==Useless example==
Uses [[Tmp_statement|tmp]], [[%tmp]] and [[%op]] to control the loop
+
Uses [[Tmp_statement|tmp]], [[%tmp]] and [[%op]] to control the loop.
  
 
  tmp 0 "0"
 
  tmp 0 "0"

Revision as of 08:19, 11 March 2010

The LOOP and ENDLOOP statements are used in the Event Handler. The LOOP - ENDLOOP statements can not be nested. When the script execution reaches ENDLOOP, the script jumps back to the previous LOOP statement.

IF/ENDIF along with STOP or BREAK must be used to exit from the loop.

As a safety precaution, looping will stop after 1000 iterations. Use LOOP with caution. Don't send more than a few dozen Data protocol messages from a single event.

This feature is new in AMC 11.00.

Examples

Useless example

Uses tmp, %tmp and %op to control the loop.

tmp 0 "0"
LOOP
 $put 8 "loop %tmp(0) \n"
 tmp 0 "%op(%tmp(0),+,1)"
 IF %op(%tmp(0),=,5)
  BREAK
 ENDIF
ENDLOOP
$put 8 "end loop %tmp(0) \n"

The script prints the following text on TST:

loop 0
loop 1
loop 2
loop 3
loop 4
end loop 5

Useful example:

This example switches off Audio Program on own station plus stations in Mutual exclusion group of own station, using TPROG and %ges.

$TPROG L%1.dir U%chg(0,1) 
tmp 0 "%ges(%1.phy, 0)" 
LOOP
 IF %op(%tmp(0),=,0)
  STOP
 ENDIF
 $TPROG N%tmp(0) U%chg(0,1)
 tmp 0 "%ges(%1.phy, %tmp(0))" 
ENDLOOP